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First Nations leaders ask Trudeau to advance residential school searches, further work on TRC calls to action
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First Nations leaders ask Trudeau to advance residential school searches, further work on TRC calls to action
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Editorial
More than half of eligible Manitobans are now double-dosed. While the COVID-19 vaccination rates are cause for celebration, the way we got here is not.
More than half of eligible Manitobans are now double-dosed. While the COVID-19 vaccination rates are cause for celebration, the way we got here is not.
Manitoba’s vaccine task force appears to have failed to account for race-based risk factors when determining vaccination eligibility, likely leading to higher hospitalizations and worse outcomes for residents who are Black, Indigenous or people of colour, according to data released last week.
During the third wave of the pandemic, intensive-care admission rates were more than four times higher for BIPOC communities than for white residents. Racialized patients were also 10 years younger, on average, than their white counterparts and many were not yet eligible for a vaccine an indication of the shortcomings of a rollout based on age alone.
3 strikes and you re outed: Brian Pallister makes another inflammatory comment about Indigenous relations
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Winnipeg Free Press Save to Read Later
Dr. Marcia Anderson, public health lead, Manitoba First Nation Pandemic Response Coordination Team. THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES/John Woods
Public health officials in Manitoba need to deal with systemic barriers stacked against Black, Indigenous and people of colour to properly prepare for the fourth wave, a new provincial report states.
Public health officials in Manitoba need to deal with systemic barriers stacked against Black, Indigenous and people of colour to properly prepare for the fourth wave, a new provincial report states.
Manitobans who are Black, Indigenous or people of colour (BIPOC) are much more likely to be hospitalized for COVID-19 and are four times as likely to need intensive care, says a new provincial report on racial disparities in the third wave. Twice as many BIPOC Manitobans were hospitalized during the third wave than the province expected, the report stated, and Manitoba s age-based vaccine rollout didn t bridge